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POEMS 


ON 


MISCELLANEOUS SUBJECTS, 


BY 


FRANCES ELLEN WATKINS. 


TENTH THOUSAND. 


PHILADELPHIA: 


MrrrinEew & THOMPSON, PRINTERS, 


Lodge street, North side Pennsylvania Bank. 
1847. 








PREFACH. 


Or the colored population of the United States, three 
millions are doomed to the horrible condition of chattel 
slavery. That condition is the annihilation of manhood, 
the extinction of genius, the burial of mind. In it, therefore, 
there can be no progress on the part of its victims; what 
they are capable of being and doing can be only a matter 
of supposition. It is unlawful to teach them the alphabet. 
they not only have no literature, but they know not the 
meaning of the word ; for them there is no hope, and there- 
fore no incentive to a higher development; in one word, 
they are property to be owned, not persons to be protected. 

There are half a million free colored persons in our 
country. These are not admitted to equal rights and pri- 
vileges with the whites. As a body, their means of educa- 
tion are extremely limited; they are oppressed on every 
hand; they are confined to the performance of the most 
menial acts; consequently, it is not surprising that their 
intellectual, moral and social advancement is not more 
rapid. Nay, it is surprising, in view of the injustice meted 
out to them, that they have done so well. Many bright 





4 


examples of intelligence, talent, genius and piety might be 
cited among their ranks, and these are constantly multi- 
plying. , 

very indication of ability, on the part of any of their 
number, is deserving of special encouragement. Whatever 
is attempted in poetry or prose, in art or science, in profes- 
sional or mechanical life, should be viewed with a friendly 
eye, and criticised in a lenient spirit. To measure them by 
the same standard as we measure the productions of the 
favored white inhabitants of the land would be manifestly 
unjust. The varying circumstances and conditions of life 
are to be taken strictly into account. 

Hence, in reviewing the following Poems, the critic will 
remember that they are written by one young in years, and 
identified in complexion and destiny with a depressed and 
outcast race, and who has had to contend with a thousand 
disadvantages from earliest life. They certainly are very 
creditable to her, both in a literary and moral point of view, 
and indicate the possession of a talent which, if carefully 
cultivated and properly encouraged, cannot fail to secure 
for herself a poetic reputation, and to deepen the interest 
already so extensively felt in the liberation and enfranchise- 
ment of the entire colored race. Though Miss Warkxins 
has never been a slave, she has always resided in a slave. 
State, Baltimore being her native city. A specimen of her 
prose writings is also appended. A few slight alterations 
excepted, the work is entirely her own. W..G..G. 

Boston, August 15, 1854, 


POEMS. 


THE SYROPHENICIAN WOMAN. 


Joy to my bosom ! rest to my fear ! 
Judea’s prophet draweth near ! 

Joy to my bosom! peace to my heart ! 
Sickness and sorrow before him depart ! 


Rack’d with agony and pain, 
Writhing, long my child has lain ; 
Now the prophet draweth near, 
All our griefs shall disappear. 


«Lord !” she cried with mournful breath, 
‘Save! Oh, save my child from death !”’ 
But as though she was unheard, 

Jesus answered not @ word. 


With a purpose nought could move, 
And the zeal of woman’s love, 

Down she knelt in anguish wild— 

‘¢ Master ! save, Oh! si my child !”’ 


6 


‘¢? Tis not meet,” the Saviour said, 
‘Thus to waste the children’s bread ; 
I am only sent to seek 

Tsrael’s lost and scattered sheep.” 


‘‘True,” she said, ‘‘ Oh gracious Lord ! 
True and faithful is thy word : 

But the humblest, meanest, may 

‘¢ Hat the crumbs they cast away.” 


‘¢ Woman,” said th’ astonish’d Lord, 
‘¢ Be it even as thy word! 

By thy faith that knows no fail, 
Thou hast ask’d, and shalt prevail.” 





THE SLAVE MOTHER. 


HEARD you that shriek? It rose 
So wildly on the air, 

It seemed as if a burden’d heart 
Was breaking in despair. 


Saw you those hands so sadly clasped— 
The bowed and feeble head—- 

The shuddering of that fragile form— 
That look of grief and dread ? 


7 


Saw you the sad, imploring eye ¢ 
Its every glance was pain, 
As if a storm of agony 
Were sweeping through the brain. 


She is a mother, pale with fear, 
Her boy clings to her side, 

And in her kirtle vainly tries 
His trembling form to hide. 


He is not hers, although she bore 
For him a mother’s pains ; 

He is not hers, although her blood 
Is coursing through his veins! 


He is not hers, for cruel hands 
May rudely tear apart 

The only wreath of household love 
That binds her breaking heart. 


His love has been a joyous light 
That o’er her pathway smiled, 

A fountain gushing ever new, 
Amid life’s desert wild. 


His lightest word has been a tone 
Of music round her heart, 

Their lives a streamlet blent in one— 
Oh, Father ! must they part ? 


8 


They tear him from her circling arms, 
Her last and fond embrace . 

Oh! never more may her sad eyes 
Gaze on his mournful face. 


No marvel, then, these bitter shrieks 
Disturb the listening air : 

She is a mother, and her heart 
Is breaking in despair. 


ae eee 


BIBLE DEFENCE OF SLAVERY. 


TAKE sackcloth of the darkest dye, 
And shroud the pulpits round ! 

Servants of Him that cannot lie, 
Sit mourning on the ground. 


Let holy horror blanch each cheek, 
Pale every brow with fears: 

And rocks and stones, if ye could speak, 
Ye well might melt to tears ! 


Let sorrow breathe in every tone, 
In every strain ye raise ; 

Insult not God’s majestic throne 
With th’ mockery of praise. 


9g 


A “ reverend” man, whose light should be 
The guide of age and youth, 

Brings to the shrine of Slavery 
The sacrifice of truth ! 


For the direst wrong by man imposed, 
Since Sodom’s fearful ery, 

The word of life has been unclosed, 
To give your God the lie. 


Oh! when ye pray for heathen lands, 
And plead for their dark shores, 

Remember Slavery’s cruel hands 
Make heathens at your doors! 


~~ 


ELIZA HARRIS. 


' LiKe a fawn from the arrow, startled and wild, 

A woman swept by us, bearing a child ; 

In her eye was the night of a settled despair, 

And her brow was o’ershaded with anguish and care. 


She was nearing the river—in reaching the brink, ° 
She heeded no danger, she paused not to think! 
For she is a mother—her child is a slave— 

And she’ll give him his freedom, or find him a grave ! 


10 


It was a vision to haunt us, that innocent face— 

So pale in its aspect, so fair in its grace ; 

As the tramp of the horse and the bay of the hound, 
With the fetters that gall, were trailing the ground ! 


She was nerv’d by despair, and strengthened by woe, 
As she leap’d o’er the chasms that yawn’d from below; 
Death howl’d in the tempest, and rav’d in the blast, 
But she heard not the sound till the danger was past. 


Oh! how shall I speak of my proud country’s shame? 
Of the stains on her glory, how give them their name? 
How say that her banner in mockery waves— 

Her “star spangled banner’’—o’er millions of slaves ? 


How say that the lawless may torture and chase 
A woman whose crime is the hue of her face? 
How the depths of the forest may echo around 
With the shrieks of despair, and the bay of the hound? 


With her step on the ice, and her arm on her child, 
The danger was fearful, the pathway was wild ; 
But, aided by Heaven, she gained a free shore, 
Where the friends of humanity open’d their door. 


So fragile and lovely, so fearfully pale, 

Like a lily that bends to the breath of the gale, 
Save the heave of her breast, and the sway of her hair, 
You'd have thought her a statue of fear and despair. 


il 


In agony close to her bosom she press’d 

The life of her heart, the child of her breast :— 

Oh ! love from its tenderness gathering might, 

Had strengthen’d her soul for the dangers of flight. 


But she’s free !—yes, free from the land where the slave 
From the hand of oppression must rest in the grave ; 
Where bondage and torture, where scourgesand chains, 


Have plac’d on our banner indelible stains. 
/ 


The bloodhounds have miss’d the scent of her way ; 
The hunter is rifled and foil’d of his prey; 

Fierce jargon and cursing, with clanking of chains, 
Make sounds of strange discord on Liberty’s plains. 


With the rapture love and fulness of bliss, 

She plac’d on his brow a mother’s fond kiss :— 
Oh! poverty, danger and death she can brave, 
For the child of her love is no longer a slave ! 


——= PS - 


ETHIOPIA. 


YeEs! Ethiopia yet shall stretch 
Her bleeding hands abroad ; 

Her cry of agony shall reach 
The burning throne of God. 





12 


The tyrant’s yoke from off her neck, 
His fetters from her soul, 

The mighty hand of God shall break, 
And spurn the base control. 


Redeemed from dust and freed from chains, 
Her sons shall lift their eyes ; 

From cloud-capt hills and verdant plains 
Shall shouts of triumph rise. 


Upon her dark, despairing brow, 
Shall play a smile of peace ; 
For God shall bend unto her wo, 
And bid her sorrows cease. 


’Neath sheltering vines and stately palms 
Shall laughing children play, 

And aged sires with joyous psalms 
Shall gladden every day. 


Secure by night, and blest by day, 
Shall pass her happy hours ; 

Nor human tigers hunt for prey 
Within her peaceful bowers. 


Thén, Ethiopia! stretch, oh! stretch 
Thy bleeding hands abroad ; 

Thy cry of agony shall reach 
And find redress from God. 


13 


THE DRUNKARD’S CHILD. 


HE stood beside his dying child, 
With a dim and bloodshot eye ; 

They’d won him from the haunts of vice 
To see his first-born die. 

He came with a slow and staggering tread, 
A vague, unmeaning stare, 

And, reeling, clasped the clammy hand, 
So deathly pale and fair. 


In a dark and gloomy chamber, 
Life ebbing fast away, 

On a coarse and wretched pallet, 
The dying sufferer lay : 

A smile of recognition 
Lit up the glazing eye 5 

‘¢T’m very glad,” it seemed to say, 
‘¢ You’ve come to see me die.”’ 

That smile reached to his callous heart, 
Its sealéd fountains stirred ; 

He tried to speak, but on his lips 
Faltered and died each word. 

And burning tears like rain 
Poured down his bloated face, 

Where guilt, remorse and shame 
Had scathed, and es their traces 





14 


‘¢ My father !” said the dying child, 
(His voice was faint and low,) 
‘Oh! clasp me closely to your heart, 
And kiss me ere I go. 
Bright angels beckon me away, 
To the holy city fair— 
Oh! tell me, father, ere I go, 
Say, will you meet me there?” 


He clasped him to his throbbing heart, j 
‘T will! I will!’ he said; 
His pleading ceased—the father held 
His first-born and his dead ! 
The marble brow, with golden curls, 
Lay lifeless on his breast ; 
Like sunbeams on the distant clouds 
Which line the gorgeous west. 


THE SLAVE AUCTION. ‘ 


THE sale began—young girls were there, . 
Defenceless in their wretchedness, 

Whose stifled sobs of deep despair 
Revealed their anguish and distress. 


cea Tg ee 


oe ee 


15 


And mothers stood with streaming eyes, 
And saw their dearest children sold ; 
Unheeded rose their bitter cries, 
While tyrants bartered them for gold. 


And woman, with her love and truth— 
For these in sable forms may dwell— 

Gaz’d on the husband of her youth, 
With anguish none may paint or tell. 


And men, whose sole crime was their hue, 
The impress of their Maker’s hand, 

And frail and shrinking children, too, 
Were gathered in that mournful band. 


Ye who have laid your love to rest, 
And wept above their lifeless clay, 
Know not the anguish of that breast, 
Whose lov’d are rudely torn away. 


Ye may not know how desolate 
Are bosoms rudely forced to part, 
And how a dull and heavy weight> 
Will press the life-drops from the heart. 





16 


THE REVEL. 


‘“‘ He knoweth not that the dead are there.” 


In yonder halls reclining 
Are forms surpassing fair, 
And brilliant lights are shining, 
But, oh! the dead are there ! 


There ’s music, song and dance, 
There ’s banishment of care, 

And mirth in every glance, 
But, oh! the dead are there! 


‘The wine cup’s sparkling glow 
Blends with the viands rare, 
There ’s revelry and show, 
But still, the dead are there! 


’Neath that flow of song and mirth 
Runs the current of despair, 

But the simple sons of earth 
Know not the dead are there! 


They ’Il shudder start and tremble, 
They ’ll weep in wild despair, 

When the solemn truth breaks on them, 
That the dead, the dead are there ! 


21 


Wed not a man whose merit lies 
In things of outward show, 
In raven hair or flashing eyes, 
That please your fancy so. 


But marry one who’s good and kind, 
And free from all pretence ; 
Who, if without a gifted mind, 
At least has common sense. 


+ i 


SAVED BY FAITH. 
“ She said, if I may but touch his clothes, I shall be whole.” 


Lire to her no brightness brought, 
Pale and striken was her brow, 

Till a bright and joyous thought 
Lit the darkness of her woe. 


Long had sickness on her preyed, 
Strength from every nerve had gone ; 
Skill and art could give no aid: 
Thus her weary life passed on. 


Like a sad and mournful dream, 
Daily felt she life depart, 

Hourly knew the vital stream 
Left the fountain of her heart. 


17 


THAT BLESSED HOPE. 


Ox! crush it not, that hope so blest, 
Which cheers the fainting heart, 

And points it to the coming rest, 
Where sorrow has no part. 


Tear from my heart each worldly prop, 
Unbind each earthly string, 

But to this blest and glorious hope, 
Oh! let my spirit cling. 


It cheer’d amid the days of old 
Each holy patriarch’s breast ; 

It was an anchor to their souls, 
Upon it let me rest. 


When wandering in dens and caves, 
In sheep and goat skins dress’d, 
A peel’d and scatter’d people learned 

To know this hope was blest. 


Help me, amidst this world of strife, 
To long for Christ to reign, 

That when He brings the crown of life, 
T may that crown obtain ! 


o* 





18 


THE DYING CHRISTIAN 


THE light was faintly streaming 
Within a darkened room, 

Where a woman, faint and feeble, 
Was sinking to the tomb. 


The silver cord was loosened, 
We knew that she must die ; 

We read the mournful token 
In the dimness of her eye. 


We read it in the radiance 
That lit her pallid cheek, 

And the quivering of the feeble lip, 
Too faint its joys to speak. 


Like a child oppressed with slumber, 
She calmly sank to rest, 

With her trust in her Redeemer, 
And her head upon His breast. 


She faded from our vision, 

Like a thing of love and light; 
But we feel she lives for ever, 

A spirit pure and bright. 


19 


REPORT. 


I HEARD, my young friend, 
You were seeking a wife, - 
A woman to make 
Your companion for life. 


Now, if you are seeking 
A wife for your youth, 

Let this be your aim, then— d 
Seek a woman of truth. 


She may not have talents, 
With greatness combined, 

Her gifts may be humble, 
Of person and mind: 


But if she be constant, 

And gentle, and true, 
Believe me my friend, 

She’s the woman for you! 


Oh! wed not for beauty, 
Though fair is the prize; 
Tt may pall when you grasp it, 

And fade in your eyes. 





20 


Let gold not allure you, 
Let wealth not attract ; 
With a house full of treasure, 
A woman may lack. 


Let her habits be frugal, 
Her hands not afraid 
To work in her household 
Or follow her trade. 


Let her language be modest, 
Her actions discreet ; 

Her manners refined, 
And free from deceit. 


Now if such you should find, 
In your journey through life, 
Just open your mind, 
And make her your wife. 


ee 


ADVICE TO THE GIRLS. 


Nay, do not blush! I only heard 
You had a mind to marry; 

I thought I’d speak a friendly word, 
So just one moment tarry. 











22 


He who lull’d the storm to rest, 
Cleans’d the lepers, raised the dead, 

Whilst a crowd around him press’d, 
Near that suffering one did tread. 


Nerv’d by blended hope and fear, 
Reasoned thus her anxious heart ; 

“Tf to touch him I draw near, 
All my suffering shall depart. 


“While the crowd around him stand, . 
I will touch,” the sufferer said ; 

Forth she reached her timid hand— 
As she touched her sickness fled. 


“ Who hath touched me?” Jesus cried ; 
‘Virtue from my body ’s gone.” 
From the crowd a voice replied, 
‘‘ Why inguire in such a throng ?”’ 


Faint with fear through every limb, 
Yet too grateful to deny, 
Tremblingly she knelt to him, 
‘¢ Lord !” she answered, it was I?’ 


Kindly, gently, Jesus said— 

Words like balm unto her soul— 
‘“‘Peace upon thy life be shed! 

Child! thy faith has made thee whole!” 


25 


DIED OF STARVATION. 


They forced him into prison, 
Because he begged for bread ; 

‘My wife is starving—dying !” 
In vain the poor man plead.” 


They forced him into prison, 
Strong bars enclosed the walls, 
While the rich and proud were feasting 
Within their sumptuous halls. 


He’d striven long with anguish, 
Had wrestled with despair ; 

But his weary heart was breaking 
’Neath its crushing load of care. 


And he prayed them in that prison, 
«¢ Oh, let me seek my wife !” 

For he knew that want was feeding 
On the remnant of her life. 


That night his wife lay moaning 
Upon her bed in pain ; 

Hunger gnawing at her vitals, 
Fever scorching through her brain. 


* Seo this case, as touchingly related, in “ Oliver Twist,” 
by Dickens. 





24 


She wondered at his tarrying, 
He was not wont to stay; 

*Mid hunger, pain and watching, 
The moments waned away. 


Sadly crouching by the embers, 
Her famished children lay ; 

And she longed to gaze upon them, 
As her spirit passed away. 


But the embers were too feeble, 
She could not see each face, 

So she clasped her arms around them— 
’T was their mother’s last embrace. 


They loosed him from his prison, 
As a felon from his chain ; 

Though his strength was hunger bitten, 
He sought his home again. 


Just as her spirit linger’d 
On Time’s receding shore, 
She heard his welcome footstep 
On the threshold of the door. 


He was faint and spirit-broken, 
But, rousing from despair, 
He clasped her icy fingers, 
As she breathed her dying prayer. 








25 


With a gentle smile and blessing, 
Her spirit winged its flight, 

As the morn, in all its glory, 
Bathed the world in dazzling light. 


There was weeping, bitter weeping, 
In the chamber of the dead, 

For well the stricken husband knew 
She had died for want of bread. 


A MOTHER’S HEROISM. 


When the noble mother of Lovrsoy heard of her gson’s 
death, she said, ‘It is well! I had rather he should die so 


than desert his principles.” 


THE murmurs of a distant strife 
Fell on a mother’s ear; 

Her son had yielded up his life, 

_ Mid scenes of wrath and fear. 


They told her how he’d spent his breath 
In pleading for the dumb, 
And how the glorious martyr wreath 
Yer child had nobly won. 
3 





7 


26 


They told her of his courage high, 


Mid brutal force and might ; 
How he had nerved himself to die, 
In battling for the right. 


It seemed at if a fearful storm 
Swept wildly round her soul ; 

A moment, and her fragile form 
Bent ’neath its fierce control. 


From lip and brow the color fled— 
But light flashed to her eye: 

‘©? is well! ’tis well!” the mother said, 
‘¢ That thus my child should die. 


“?T igs well that, to his latest breath, 
He plead for liberty ; 

Truth nerved him for the hour of death, 
And taught him how to die.: 


“‘ Tt taught him how to cast aside 
Harth’s honors and renown ; 

To trample on her fame and pride, 
And win a martyr’s crown.” 


—_ A 


27 


THE FUGITIVE’S WIFE. 


Ir was my sad and weary lot 
T'o toil in slavery ; 

But one thing cheered my lowly cot— 
My husband was with me. 


One evening, as our children played 
Around our cabin door, 

I noticed on his brow a shade 
I’d ‘never seen before ; 


And in his eyes a gloomy night 
Of anguish and despair ;— 

I gazed upon their troubled light, 
To read the meaning there. 


He strained me to his heaving heart— 
My own beat wild with fear ; 

I knew not, but I sadly felt 
There must be evil near. 


He vainly strove to cast aside 
The tears that fell like rain :— 

Too frail, indeed, is manly pride, 
To strive with grief and pain. 


30 


Next came a sad procession, 
With many a sob and tear ; 

A widow’d, childless mother 
Totter’d by an humble bier. 


The vision quickly faded, 
The sad, unwelcome sight ; 
But his lip forgot its laughter, 
And his eye its careless light. 


A moment, and the flood-gates 
Of memory opened wide ; 

And remorseful recollection 
Flowed like a lava tide. 


That widow’s wail of anguish 
Seemed strangely blending there, 
And mid the soft lights floated 


That image of despair. 


—<——. 


THE PRODIGAL’S RETURN. 


HE came—a wanderer ; years of sin 
Had blanched his blooming cheek, 
Telling a tale of strife within, 
That words might vainly speak. 





O| 


His feet were bare, his garments torn, 
His brow was deathly white ; 

His heart was bleeding, crushed and worn, 
His soul had felt a blight. 


His father saw him; pity swept 
And yearn’d through every vein ; 
He ran and clasp’d his child, and wept, 
Murm’ring, “ He lives again !” 


‘‘ Father, ve come, but not to claim 
Aught from thy love or grace ; 

I come, a child of guilt and shame, 
To beg a servant’s place.” 


‘Enough! enough!” the father said, 
‘‘ Bring robes of princely cost !’’— 

The past with all its shadows fled, 

~ For now was found the lost. 


‘¢Put shoes upon my poor child’s feet, 
With rings his hand adorn, 

And bid my house his coming greet 
With music, dance and song.” 


Oh ! Saviour, mid this world of strife, 
When wayward here we roam, 
Conduct us to the paths of life, 
And guide us safely home. 


d2 


Then in thy holy courts above, 
Thy praise our lips shall sound, 

While angels join our song of love, 
That we, the lost are found! 


1 ee ee 


EVA’S FAREWELL. 


FAREWELL, father! I ama dying, 
Going to the “ glory land,” 

Where the sun is ever shining, 
And the zephyr’s ever bland. 


Where the living fountains flowing, 
(Juench the pining spirit’s thirst ; 

Where the tree of life is growing, 
Where the crystal fountains burst. 


Father ! hear that music holy 
Floating from the spirit land! 

At the pearly gates of glory, 
Radiant angels waiting stand. 


Father! kiss your dearest Eva, 
Press her cold and clammy hand, 

Hre the glittering hosts receive her, 
Welcome to their cherub band. 





dd 


THE TENNESSEE HERO. 


“He had heard his comrades plotting to obtain their 
liberty, and rather than betray them he received 750 lashes 
and died.” 


He stood before the savage throng, 
The base and coward crew ; 

A tameless light flashed from his eye, 
His heart beat firm and true. 


He was the hero of his band, 
The noblest of them all ; 

Though fetters galled his weary limbs, 
His spirit spurned their thrall. 


And towered, in its manly might, 
Above the murderous crew. 
Oh ! liberty had nerved his heart, 

And every pulse beat true. 


‘‘ Now tell us,” said the savage troop, 
‘¢ And life thy gain shall be! 

Who are the men that plotting, say— 
‘They must and will be free !’ ” 


Oh, could you have seen the hero then, 
As his lofty soul arose, 

And his dauntless eyes defiance flashed 
On his mean and craven foes! 


a 


34 


‘¢T know the men who would be free ; 
They are the heroes of your land ; 
But death and torture I defy, 
Ere I betray that band. 


And what! oh, what is life-to me, 
Beneath your base control ? 

Nay ! do your worst. Ye have no chains 

. To bind my free-born soul.” 


They brought the hateful lash and scourge, 
With murder in each eye. 

But a solemn vow was on his lips— 
He had resolved to die. 


Yes, rather than betray his trust, 
He ’d meet a death of pain ; 
7’ was sweeter far to meet it thus 

Than wear a treason stain ! 


Like storms of wrath, of hate and pain, 
The blows rained thick and fast ; 

But the monarch soul kept true 
Till the gates of life were past. 


And the martyr spirit fled 
To the throne of God on high, 
And showed his gaping wounds 
Before the unslumbering eye. 


FREE LABOR. 


I wear an easy garment, 
O’er it no toiling slave 
Wept tears of hopeless anguish, 
In his passage to the grave. 


And from its ample folds 
Shall rise no ery to God, 
Upon its warp and woof shall be 
No stain of tears and blood. 


Oh, lightly shall it press my form, 
Unladened with a sigh, 

I shall not ’mid its rustling hear, 
Some sad despairing cry. 


This fabric is too light to bear 
The weight of bondsmen’s tears, 

I shall not in its texture trace 
The agony of years. 


Too light to bear a smother’d sigh, 
From some lorn woman’s heart, 

Whose only wreath of household love 
Is rudely torn apart. 





36 


Then lightly shall it press my form, 
Unburden’d by a sigh ; 
And from its seams and folds shall rise, 
No voice to pierce the sky, 


And witness at the throne of God, 
In language deep and strong, 

That I have nerv’d Oppression’s hand, 
For deeds of guilt and wrong. 





LINES. 


At the Portals of the Future, 
Full of madness, guilt and gloom, 
Stood the hateful form of Slavery, 
Crying, Give, Oh! give me room— 


Room to smite the earth with cursing, 
Room to scatter, rend and slay, 

From the trembling mother’s bosom 
Room to tear her child away ; 


Room to trample on the manhood 
Of the country far and wide ; 

Room to spread o’er every Hden 
Slavery’s scorching lava-tide 


et 


at 


Pale and trembling stood the Future, 
Quailing ’neath his frown of hate, 

As he grasped with bloody clutches 
The great keys of Doom and Fate. 


In his hand he held a banner 

All festooned with blood and tears : 
Twas a fearful ensign, woven 

With the grief and wrong of years. 


On his brow he wore a helmet 

Decked with strange and cruel art; 
Every jewel was a life-drop 

Wrung from some poor broken heart. 


Though her cheek was pale and anxious, 
Yet, with look and brow sublime, 

By the pale and trembling Future 
Stood the Crisis of our time. 


And from many a throbbing bosom 
Came the words in fear and gloom, 

Tell us, Oh! thou coming Crisis, 
What shallZbe our country’s doom ? 


Shall the wings of dark destruction 
Brood and hover o’er our land, 

Till we trace the steps of ruin 
By their BES, from strand to strand ? 








38 


With a look and voice prophetic 
Spake the solemn Crisis then : 

I have only mapped the future 
For the erring sons of men. 


If ye strive for Truth and Justice, 
If ye battle for the Right, 

Ye shall lay your hands all strengthened 
On God’s robe of love and light ; 


But if ye trample on His children, 
To his ear will float each groan, 
Jar the cords that bind them to Him, 

And they ’ll vibrate at his throne. 


And the land that forges fetters, . 
Binds the weak and poor in chains, 

Must in blood or tears of sorrow 
Wash away her guilty stains. 


——— =a =. 


THE DISMISSAL OF TYNG. 


‘* We have but three words to say, ‘ served him right.’ ” 


Church Journal (Episcopa 


SERVED him right! How could he dare 
To touch the idol of our day ? 

What if its shrine be red with blood ? 
Why, let him turn his eyes away. 








ou 


Who dares dispute our right to bind 

With galling chains the weak and poor ? 
To starve and crush the deathless mind, 

Or hunt the slave from door to door ? 


Who dares dispute our right to sell 
The mother from her weeping child ? 
To hush with ruthless stripes and blows 
Her shricks and scbs of anguish wild ? 


’Tis right to plead for heathen lands, 
To send the Bible to their shores, 
And then to make, for power and pelf, 
A race of heathens at our doors. 


What holy horror filled our hearts— 

It shook our church from dome to naye— 
Our cheeks grew pale with pious dread, 

To hear him breathe the name of slave. 


Upon our Zion, fair and strong, 
His words fell like a fearful blight ; 
We turned him from our saintly fold ; 
And this we did to “serve him right.” 


te 
cle 


40) 


MISCELLANEOUS WRITINGS. 


CHRISTIANITY. 


CHRISTIANITY is a system claiming God for is au- 
thor, and the welfare of man for its object. Itis a 
system so uniform, exalted and pure, that the loftiest 
intellects have acknowledged its influence, and acqui- 
esced in the justness of its claims. Genius has bent 
from his erratic course to gather fire from her altars, 
and pathos from the agony of Gethsemane and the 
sufferings of Calvary. Philosophy and science have 
paused amid their speculative researches and won- 
drous revelations, to gain wisdom from her teachings 
and knowledge from her precepts. Poetry has culled 
her fairest flowers and wreathed her softest, to bind 
her Author’s ‘‘bleeding brow.”” Music has strung 
her sweetest lyres and breathed her noblest strains 
to celebrate His fame; whilst Learning has bent 
from her lofty heights to bow at the lowly cross. 
The constant friend of man, she has stood by him in 
his hour of greatest need. She has cheered the 
prisoner in his cell, and strengthened the martyr at 
the stake. She has nerved the frail and shrinking 
heart of woman for high and holy deeds. The worn 


w 


41 


and weary have rested their fainting heads upon her 


bosom, and gathered strength from her words and 
courage from her counsels. She has been the staff 
of decrepit age, and the joy of manhood in iis 
strength. She has bent over the form of lovely 
childhood, and suffered it to have a place in the 
Redeemer’s arms. She has stood by the bed of the 
dying, and unveiled the glories of eternal life ; gild- 
ing the darkness of the tomb with the glory of the 
resurrection. 

Christianity has changed the moral aspect of na- 
tions. Idolatrous temples have crumbled at her 
touch, and guilt owned its deformity in her presence. 
The darkest habitations of earth have been irradiated 
with heavenly light, and the death-shriek of immo- 
lated victims changed for ascriptions of praise to 
God and the Lamb. Envy and Malice have been 
rebuked by her contented look, and fretful Impa- 
tience by her gentle and resigned manner. 

At her approach, fetters have been broken, and 
men have risen redeemed from dust, and freed from 
chains. Manhood has learned its dignity and worth ; 
its kindred with angels, and alliance to God. 

To man, guilty, fallen and degraded man, she 
shows a fountain drawn from the Redeemer’s veins ; 
there she bids him wash and be clean. She points 
him to “ Mount Zion, egy of the living God, to 


‘ 


sy 


42 


an innumerable company of angels, to the spirits of 
just men made perfect, and to Jesus, the Mediator 
of the New Covenant,’ and urges him to rise from 
the degradation of sin, renew his nature, and join 
with them. She shows a pattern so spotless and holy, 
so elevated and pure, that he might shrink from it 
discouraged, did she not bring with her a promise 
from the lips of Jehovah, that he would give power 
to the faint, and might to those who have no strength. 
Learning may bring her ample pages and her pon- 
derous records, rich with the spoils of every age, 
gathered from every land, and gleaned from every 
source. Philosophy and science may bring their 
abstruse researches and wondrous revelations—Liter- 
ature her elegance, with the toils of the pen, and the 
labors of the pencil—but they are idle tales com- 
pared to the truths of Christianity. They may cul- 
tivate the intellect, enlighten the understanding, 
eive scope to the imagination, and refine the sensi- 
bilities ; but they open not, to our dim eyes and long- 
ing vision, the land of crystal founts and deathless 
flowers. Philosophy searches earth ; Religion opens 
heaven. Philosophy doubts and trembles at the 
portals of eternity ; Religion lifts the veil, and shows 
us golden streets, lit by the Redeemer’s countenance, 
and irradiated by his smile. Philosophy strives to 
reconcile us to death; Religion triumphs over it. 


43 


Philosophy treads amid the pathway of stars, and 
stands a delighted listener to the music of the 
spheres; but Religion gazes on the glorious palaces 
of God, while the harpings of the blood-washed, and 
the songs of the redeemed, fall upon her ravished 
ear. Philosophy has her place ; Religion her impor- 
tant sphere ; one is of importance here, the other of 
infinite and vital importance, both here and _ here- 
after. | 
Amid ancient lore the Word of God stands unique 
and pre-eminent. Wonderful in its construction, 
admirable in its adaptation, it contains truths that a 
child may comprehend, and mysteries into which 
angels desire to look. It is in harmony with that 
adaptation of means to ends which pervades creation, 
from the polypus tribes, elaborating their coral 
homes, to man, the wondrous work of God. It forms 
the brightest link of that glorious chain which unites 
the humblest work of creation with the throne of 
the infinite and eternal Jehovah. As light, with its 
infinite particles-and curiously-blended colors, is 
suited to an eye prepared for the alternations of day ; 
ag air, with its subtle and invisible essence, is fitted 
for the delicate organs of respiration ; and, ina word, 
as this material world is adapted to man’s physical 
nature; so the word of eternal truth is adapted to 


= 


> i er a. hee 
: é . a 


tt 


his moral nature and mental constitution. It finds 
him wounded, sick and suffering, and points him to 
the balm of Gilead andthe Physician of souls. Itfinds 
him stained by transgression and defiled with guilt, 
and directs him to the “blood that cleanseth from 
all unrighteousness and sin.” It finds him athirst 
and faint, pining amid the deserts of life, and shows 
him the wells of salvation and the rivers of life. It 
addresses itself to his moral and spiritual nature, 
makes provision for his wants and weaknesses, and 
meets his yearnings and aspirations. It is adapted 
to his mind in its earliest stages of progression, and 
its highest state of intellectuality. It provides light 
for his darkness, joy for his anguish, a solace for his 
woes, balm for his wounds, and heaven for his hopes. 
Tt unveils the unseen world, and reveals Him who 
is the light of creation, and the joy of the universe, 
reconciled through the death of His Son. It pros 
mises the faithful a blessed reiinion in a land un- 
dimmed with tears, undarkened by sorrow. It af_ 
fords a truth for the living and a refuge for the 
dying. Aided by the Holy Spirit, it guides us 
through life, points out the shoals, the quicksands 
and hidden rocks which endanger our path, and at 
last leaves us with the eternal God for our refuge, 
and his everlasting arms for our protection. 


THE COLORED PEOPLE IN AMERICA. 


HAVING been placed by a dominant race in circum- 
stances over which we have had no control, we have 
been the butt of ridicule and the mark of oppression. 
Identified with a people over whom weary ages of 
degradation have passed, whatever concerns them, as 
a race, concerns me. I have noticed among our 
people a disposition to censure and upbraid each 
other, a disposition which has its foundation rather, 
perhaps, in a want of common sympathy and consid- 
eration, than mutual hatred, or other unholy passions. 
Born to an inheritance of misery, nurtured in deg- 
radation, and cradled in oppression, with the scorn 
of the white man upon their souls, his fetters upon 
their limbs, his scourge upon their flesh, what can be 
expected from their offspring, but a mournful reiiction 
of that cursed system which spreads its baneful in- 
fluence over body and soul; which dwarfs the in- 
tellect, stunts its development, debases the spirit, and 
degrades the soul? Place any nation in the same 


‘condition which has been our hapless lot, fetter their 


limbs and degrade their souls, debase their sons and 
corrupt their daughters, and when the restless yearn- 
ings for liberty shall burn through heart and brain— 
when, tortured by wrong and goaded by oppression, 
the hearts that would madden with misery, or break 


46 


in despair, resolve to break their thrall, and escape 
from bondage, then let the bay of the bloodhound 
and the scent of the human tiger be upon their track ; 
—let them feel that, from the ceaseless murmur of 
the Atlantic to the sullen roar of the Pacific, from 
the thunders of the rainbow-crowned Niagara to the 
swollen waters of the Mexican gulf, they have no 
shelter for their bleeding feet, or resting-place for 
their defenceless heads ;—let them, when nominally 
free, feel that they have only exchanged the iron 
yoke of oppression for the galling fetters of a vitiated 
public opinion ;—let prejudice assign them the lowest 
places and the humblest positions, and make them 
‘“hewers of wood and drawers of water ;’’—let their 
income be so small that they must from necessity 
bequeath to their children an inheritance of poverty 
and a limited education,—and tell me, reviler of our 
race! censurer of our people ! if there is a nation in 
whose veins runs the purest Caucasian blood, upon 
whom the same causes would not produce the same 
effects ; whose social condition, intellectual and moral 
character, would present a more favorable aspect than 
ours? But there is hope; yes, blessed be God! 
for our down-trodden and despised race. Public and 
private schools accommodate our children; and in 
my own southern home, I see women, whose lot is 
unremitted labor, saving a pittance from their scanty 








47 


wages to defray the expense of learning toread. We 
have papers edited by colored editors, which we may 
consider it an honor to possess, and a credit to sustain. 
We have a church that is extending itself from east 
to west, from north to south, through poverty and 
reproach, persecution and pain. We have our faults, 
our want of union and concentration of purpose; but 
are there not extenuating circumstances around our 
darkest faults—palliating excuses for our most egre- 
gious errors? and shall we not hope, that the mental 
and moral aspect which we present is but the first 
step of a mighty advancement, the faintest corrusca- 
tions of the day that will dawn with unclouded splen- 
dor upon our down-trodden and benighted race, and 
that ere long we may present to the admiring gaze of 
those who wish us well, a people to whom knowledge 
has given power, and righteousness exaltation ? 


FP 


BREATHING THE AIR OF FREEDOM. 


NIAGARA FALtzs, Sept. 12th, 1856. 
My Dear FrienD :—I have just returned from 
Canada to-day. I gave one lecture at Toronto, which 
was well attended. * * * Well, I have gazed for 
the first time upon Free Land! And would you 
believe it, tears sprang to my eyes, and I wept. Oh! 


48 


it was a glorious sight to gaze for the first time on a 
land where a poor slave, flying from our glorious 
land of liberty (!), would in a moment find his fetters 
broken, his shackles loosed, and whatever he was in 
the land of Washington, beneath the shadow of 
Bunker Hill Monument, or even Plymouth Rock, 
here he becomes ‘+a man and a brother.” 

I had gazed on Harper’s Ferry, or rather the Rock 
at the Ferry, towering up in simple grandeur with 
the gentle Potomac gliding peacefully by its feet, and 
felt that that was God’s Masonry ; and my soul had 
expanded in gazing on itssublimity. J had seen the 
Ocean, singing its wild chorus of sounding waves, 
and ecstacy bad thrilled upon the living chords of my 
heart. I have since then seen the rainbow-crowned 
Niagara, girdled with grandeur, and robed with glory, 
chanting the choral hymn of Omnipotence, but none 
of the sights have melted me as the first sight of 
Free Land. 

Towering mountains, lifting their hoary summits 
to catch the first faint flush of day when the sunbeams 
kiss the shadows from morning’s drowsy face, may 
expand and exalt your soul. The first view of the 
ocean may fill you with strange ecstacy and delight. 
Niagara, the great, the glorious Niagara, may hush 
your spirit with its ceaseless thunder; it may charm 
you with its robe of crested spray and rainbow crown ; 
but the land of Freedom has a lesson of deeper sig- 
nificance than foaming waves or towering mountains. 

It carries the heart back to that heroic struggle 
for emancipation, in Great Britain, in which the 
great heart of the people throbbed for liberty, and 
the mighty pulse of the nation beat for freedom till 
nearly 800,000 men, women and children arose re- 
deemed from bondage and freed from chains. 


%